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Forest Service Releases Chattooga Scoping Document

The US Forest Service released its “Scoping Document” regarding recreational
management on the Wild and Scenic Upper Chattooga River (NC,SC,GA) on Tuesday, August 14,
2007. This document marks the initiation of the formal NEPA decision
making process which will lead to a revised management plan late this year.Comments are being accepted by the USFS on the 13 page document
until September 13th of this year.

This official public comment period is one of only two remaining opportunities to let the USFS
know what you think about the 30+ year old boating ban and the 30+ years of neglect on the Upper
Chattooga River. Many in the paddling community have submitted
comments on this issue in the past. Your help is greatly appreciated
and has helped to get us to this important point. Unfortunately, you must submit your comments
again for them to matter as part of the NEPA process that is currently underway. IT IS VITALLY
IMPORTANT TO SUBMIT YOUR COMMENTS DURING THIS PUBLIC COMMENT PERIOD.

The Scoping document outlines six alternatives that the USFS intends to analyze this fall in an
Environmental Analysis, unless comments convince the agency that there are other alternatives
that should be in the scope of their analysis.

Of the six alternatives only one does not unfairly single out paddlers for harsh limits while
allowing other users to visit the Upper Chattooga in much larger or unlimited
numbers. Specifically:

- Alternatives #1, #2, and #3 propose a total ban on boating. Other uses are unlimited in #1
and #3, while #2 proposes to limit other uses if a standard of 3 encounters per day is
exceeded.

- Alternative #4 proposes a total ban on two sections of the river and harsh group number,
seasonal, and water level restrictions on the rest of the river.
Other uses are unlimited.

- Alternative #5 proposes a total ban on one section of the river and water level and group
number restrictions on the remainder of the river. Other uses are
unlimited.

- Alternative #6 allows boating on the entire river. Other uses are
unlimited.

American Whitewater has participated fully in the process leading to this document and we have
been frustrated at every turn. There is simply no data that indicates
a rationale for treating paddling differently than the other wilderness compliant uses of the
river as this scoping document clearly does. Why is boating limited
or eliminated in 5 alternatives while other uses are only limited in one? Why are alternatives not organized by various capacities and their effects as
would clearly make sense? Why has the local USFS ignored the Chief’s direction in the AW
appeal decision?

Even after spending over 1 million dollars, the USFS has not presented capacities for any or all
uses of the Chattooga River corridor, or any information that those capacities are being exceeded
or likely to be exceeded, or alternatives based on capacities. The
alternatives are essentially the same as those in the 2004 NEPA analysis that was thrown out on
appeal, with the addition of some mandatory basic river management activities.

The silver lining in an otherwise confounded scoping document is that all the action alternatives
finally propose real resource protection measures like moving campsites out of riparian areas and
fixing eroding user created trails, and several propose registration by all users. These are standard restoration and protection initiatives that are not in the
2004 Land and Resource Management Plan but will almost certainly be in the amended version of the
plan. American Whitewater views this as a tangible and positive outcome of our appeal of the plan
in 2004.

American Whitewater sees no basis whatsoever for alternatives one through five and feels that
they are both blatantly unfair and inadequately protective of the Chattooga River. We will be proposing alternatives shortly that are more fair and protective, as
well as more consistent with the user capacity analysis, governing legislation, and the field of
river management.

Again the deadline for comments from the public is September 13, 2007. You should submit your comments by the September 13th deadline to comments-southern-francismarionsumter@fs.fed.us
or mail them to John Cleeves, U.S. Forest Service, 4931 Broad River Road, Columbia, SC
29212. Comments should focus on the scope of alternatives,
highlighting things the proposed alternatives lack, suggesting better alternatives, and offering
specific comments on the proposed alternatives.

Please stay tuned into AW’s website during the next several weeks. We will be offering our recommendations within several days.